Name________________ Date________________ Sepoy Rebellion The British East India Company won rights to trade with India in the 1600s. They started small and gradually took more and more territory. To defend this territory from invaders the company built up its own army, made up of British and Indian troops called Sepoys. By 1857 there were 230,000 Sepoys in the British East India Company’s army and only 40,000 British soldiers. That an almost 6-1 ratio. At this time the Indians and British had a fairly good relationship founded in respect. Both countries were benefiting from the relationship. India produced raw materials for Britain – cotton, indigo and jute. India also exported spices, sugar, tea and wheat. British manufactured goods sold to India and railroads were built in the area. However, in May 1857 a rebellion amongst the Sepoys broke out as they took up arms against the British soldiers. A Cause of the Sepoy Rebellion: The Enfield Rifle The mutiny was, literally, triggered by a gun. Sepoys throughout India were issued with a new rifle, the Pattern of 1853 Enfield Percussion cap rifled musket - a more powerful and accurate weapon than the old smoothbore Brown Bess they had been using for the last several decades. The innovations were that the firing mechanism switched from the old, unreliable Flintlock to Percussion caps, and rifling inside the musket barrel ensured accuracy at much greater distances than was possible with old smoothbore muskets. One thing did not change in this new musket - the loading process, which did not change significantly till the introduction of metallic cartridges a few decades later. To load the new Enfield, just like the previous muskets they were issued with, soldiers had to bite the cartridge open and pour the gunpowder it contained into the rifle's muzzle, then stuff the cartridge case, which was typically paper coated with some kind of grease to make it waterproof, into the musket as wadding, before loading it with a ball. A rumor spread that the cartridges that were standard issue with this rifle were greased with lard (pork fat) or tallow (beef fat) - this was offensive to Hindu and Muslim soldiers alike, who were forbidden by their religions to eat beef or pork respectively.